Dr. Besser told INSIDE EDITION, "For her to spend a month risking her life in Africa and coming home to the greeting she received is just unacceptable."

Dr. Besser continued, "We've been texting back and forth and she's got a message she wants people to hear: 'I'm so thankful for the immense attention and support I've received. I just hope this nightmare of mine and the fight that I have undertaken is not in vain.' "

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, a potential presidential candidate, ordered Kaci to be held in quarantine after doctor Craig Spencer came down with Ebola a week following his return from Africa.

Christie said, "She's high risk and she presented with a fever which is one of the symptoms that's indicative of that. I understand Miss Hickox is uncomfortable, and I understand that she doesn't want to be quarantined. But my responsibility, my greater responsibility is to the 8.9 million people of the state of New Jersey."

But Kaci's supporters say she never had any symptoms.

"Despite what the governor says, she's not ill and hasn't been ill. She was tired when she came in but she's not sick," explained Dr. Besser.

Kaci wasn't taking her quarentine lying down. Armed with a laptop and her iPhone, she wrote a scathing column over the weekend for the Dallas Morning News newspaper in which she said she was treated like a criminal after being held for hours at Newark Airport and then rushed to that isolation tent in Newark.

As Kaci conducted a media campaign from inside her tent, her boyfriend said the governor had "messed with the wrong redhead."

Kaci tweeted pictures showing life inside her isolated tent and spoke with CNN by phone, explaining, "I have a kind of port-a-potty type restroom, no shower facilities and no connection with the outside world except my iPhone which I insisted that I brought with me."

Kaci hired a high-powered civil liberties lawyer to get her out.

Her boyfriend, Ted Wilbur, told INSIDE EDITION she was a prisoner.

Wilbur told INSIDE EDITION, "If you go over and save lives from people who are dying from a horrible disease you get put into prison, an isolation tent. That's not the kind of society we should have, is it?"